Pride 2017 isn’t over yet — and our inbox is now open for Tumblr’s next Issue Time on transgender rights. Experts, advocates and journalists are here to answer your questions about the issues and struggles transgender people face and how we can work together to solve them.
According to the National Transgender Discrimination Survey, 78% of transgender/gender non-conforming students in grades K-12 said they’ve beed harassed, while 35% reported physical assault and 12% reported sexual violence.
According to the same survey, transgender respondents experienced unemployment at double the rate of the general population, while 26% lost a job due to being transgender.
20% of respondents also reported that they were evicted or denied housing simply for being transgender.
19% of respondents said that someone denied them medical services because of their gender identity.
From 2010 to 2016, at least 111 transgender and gender-nonconforming Americans were murdered because of their gender identity, 72% of them were black trans women and gender-nonconforming femmes, who identify as neither male nor female but present as feminine.
Anti-transgender legislation continues to sprout up nationwide.
We’ll be accepting questions until Wednesday, June 28 at 11 AM and publishing the responses here on Thursday and Friday, June 29 and 30.
Let’s meet the panelists:
Tiq Milan has been an advocate in the LGBT community for over a decade. He is also a writer and journalist who carved a niche for himself as a media advocate and one of the leading voices for transgender equality. He is a regular on-air contributor to Huff Post Live and various MSNBC news outlets and has penned articles for BET.com,Rolling Stone, The New York Times, The Source, Vibe and others on issues facing the LGBT movement. Tiq is the former editor-in-chief of IKONS magazine, an LGBT pop culture magazine, and has been a freelance pop culture journalist for several years, interviewing people from Jay-Z to Cicely Tyson. Recently married to Toronto based artist and educator Kim Katrin Milan, they together speak about creating love in queer communities of color and intersectional approaches to human rights activism in North America and abroad.
Alex Schmider received his Bachelors of Science degree in Psychology with a minor in Media & Communications from Tufts University in 2013. Prior to joining GLAAD’s team, he worked as the Communications Coordinator at the Los Angeles LGBT Center where he also participated in the Happy Hippie Foundation’s #InstaPride campaign and was featured in a Hallmark Mother’s Day ad, showing the love between a mom and her transgender son. Since joining GLAAD in 2016, Alex has worked with Tinder to launch its trans-inclusive app update, MTV on content for Transgender Awareness Week, and Teen Vogue on featured videos and articles. Schmider was selected as one of Forbes 30 Under 30 for Media in 2017, and the same year also received the Visibility Award from L.A. Pride. In his spare time, Alex volunteers as a camp counselor for Camp Aranu'tiq—a camp for transgender and gender nonconforming youth, who inspire him to do what he can to accelerate acceptance for the transgender community.
Meredith Talusan is an award-winning journalist and author who has written features, essays, and opinion pieces for many publications, including The Guardian, The Atlantic, VICE, Matter, Backchannel, The Nation, Mic, BuzzFeed News, and the American Prospect. She has received journalism awards from GLAAD and the Society for Professional Journalists, and is a contributor to Nasty Women: Feminism, Resistance, and Revolution in Trump's America. She lives in New York City.
Mathew Rodriguez is an award-winning journalist and staff writer at Mic. He is a former editor at TheBody.com, an HIV/AIDS news website, and a contributing editor at Modern Loss. His work focuses on the intersectional lives of LGBTQ people. He also hosts a podcast, Slayerfest98, about his favorite television show, Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
Shelby Chestnut is the Director of Community Organizing and Public Advocacy at the New York City Anti-Violence Project. For over a decade, Shelby has been organizing with LGBTQ people, people of color, and low income communities to address violence, promote access to resources, and affect local policy change that is for and by the people most impacted by oppression. Shelby holds a BA from Antioch College and an MS from the New School. Shelby is a member of the Assinibouine Nation in Montana. Shelby currently calls Brooklyn, New York home.
Serena Jazmine Daniari is a passionate writer, blogger, social media strategist, writer and transgender activist of Iranian descent. She graduated from New York University in 2015 with a BS in Media, Culture, and Communication. Since then, Serena has worked with AOL, Cambio, The Huffington Post, and #BUILTBYGIRLS working on audience development and social strategy. During this time, Serena publicly documented and blogged about her gender transition online as she underwent various gender-affirming surgeries. Serena is now a Social Programming Editor at Mic, a media company for millennials. She has worked closely with GLSEN, GLAAD, and the Transgender Law Center.